A few times each month, I tire of the complexities of GNOME and KDE. Then I turn to a simpler, faster desktop for a couple of days or a week -- and that desktop, more often than not, is Xfce. No other desktop Im aware of balances convenience and speed half so well.

The only drawback has been that, until this week, the current version of Xfce has been a couple of years old and looking blocky and a little limited in what it can do. Consequently, the release of Xfce 4.8 is both welcome and overdue. The new release gives Xfce a facelift and some new enhancements to general functionality, settings, and -- most of all -- the panel, while not compromising previous releases' functionality and lightweight.

This approach makes 4.8 seem a minor release by GNOME or KDE standards, but I suspect that I'm not the only one who wouldn't have things any other way. Unlike the other major desktops, Xfce is a niche environment, and its success should be judged by how well it fills that niche -- not on how many new features and applications can be crammed into it. It's an attitude that may be timely, considering some of the changes due to arrive on the Linux desktop during 2011.

Xfce 4.8 is available as source code from the project, and already starting to become available for major distributions. Packaged versions are available from private repositories for
Ubuntu and Fedora, as well as pre-release packages for Debian and its derivative distributions. You may find that some of these packages are incompatible with existing Xfce utilities -- for example, as I write, the Ubuntu packages are incompatible with the previous version's Orage calendar.

A visual tour and release notes are also available, although the release notes are aimed more at developers than at general users.

Once the new version is installed, you can select it as your desktop as you log in.

General Features and Behind the Scenes

You won't see much in the way of new applications in the 4.8 release. About the closest you get is the new fuzzy clock for the panel, which indicates the time as "quarter past three," instead of with the false precision of 3:15:25 insisted on by digital clocks. Otherwise, much of the new Xfce release looks superficially like previous versions with the same features hat are so simple that they appear subtle, such as dragging and dropping open windows in the virtual workshop indicator on the panel.

You will find some changes. For instance, the progress dialogs for moving or copying files now show the progress for individual files, rather than the overall progress of the entire process. Similarly, you can now drag and drop from application launchers from the panel, menu, or file manager to add them to the desktop -- a simple step that Xfce has needed for several releases. Both these enhancements are small in themselves, but well in keeping with Xfce's ongoing efforts to avoid unnecessary complexity.

The same is true of the new eject button in the file manager beside removable devices. In earlier releases, you could remove a device via the context menu, but 4.8 eliminates the extra click. And if you add a shortcut to a directory in a panel, then clicking on its icon automatically shows sub-directories.

The Xfce 4.8 desktop

Yet another change is the reorganization of the Setting Manager. Unlike in KDE, Xfce's setting window includes all the customization options in one place, including those for the calendar, panel, and file manager, so that you don't have to search the desktop clicking one item after the next searching for options. For the first time, as well, configuration dialogs for printing and sound are included as well.

These are the sorts of finishing details that quickly add up -- and all too often are delayed in other desktops in favor of developing new features.

Still, on the whole, most of the biggest changes are behind the scenes. If you are a non-English speaker, you may notice substantial updates to translations in almost all aspects of the desktop from libraries to applications -- not just in western European languages like French and German, but also Romanian, Greek, Hungarian, and Arabic.

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